Small bowel obstruction

(Redirected from SBO)

Background

  • Mechanical obstruction of the small intestine preventing normal passage of intestinal contents
  • Adhesions from prior surgery are the most common cause (60-75% of all SBO)
  • Second most common cause: incarcerated hernia (~15%)
  • Other causes: malignancy, Crohn's disease, intussusception, volvulus, gallstone ileus, foreign body, stricture
  • Closed-loop obstruction: segment of bowel obstructed at two points → rapid progression to strangulation and ischemia
  • SBO accounts for ~15% of ED visits for acute abdominal pain
  • Mortality: <5% for simple SBO; up to 25% for strangulated SBO

Classification

  • Partial: some gas/fluid passes through → flatus may be present
  • Complete: no passage of gas or stool
  • Simple: obstruction without vascular compromise
  • Strangulated: obstruction with compromised blood supply → ischemia → necrosis → perforation

Clinical Features

  • Crampy, intermittent abdominal pain (colicky; occurs in waves)
  • Nausea and vomiting (the more proximal the obstruction, the earlier and more prominent the vomiting)
  • Obstipation (absence of flatus and stool) — complete obstruction
  • Abdominal distension (more prominent with distal obstruction)
  • High-pitched, hyperactive bowel sounds → late: absent bowel sounds (ileus from ischemia)
  • Prior surgical history — ask about ALL prior abdominal/pelvic operations
  • Tachycardia, dehydration from third-spacing and vomiting

Signs of Strangulation (Surgical Emergency)

  • Constant, severe pain (no longer colicky)
  • Fever
  • Peritoneal signs (rebound, guarding)
  • Tachycardia, hypotension
  • Leukocytosis with left shift
  • Elevated lactate
  • No single clinical or lab finding reliably rules out strangulation

Differential Diagnosis

Template:Abdominal pain DDX

Evaluation

Labs

  • BMP: electrolytes (hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis from vomiting), BUN/Cr (dehydration), bicarbonate
  • CBC: leukocytosis (consider strangulation if WBC >15,000)
  • Lactate: elevated suggests bowel ischemia (but normal lactate does NOT exclude strangulation)
  • Lipase: rule out pancreatitis
  • Type and screen if surgery likely

Imaging

Abdominal X-ray

  • Sensitivity ~60-70% for SBO
  • Findings: dilated small bowel loops (> 3 cm), air-fluid levels on upright, absence of colonic gas
  • Three film series (supine, upright, CXR): may show free air if perforated
  • Normal X-ray does NOT exclude SBO

CT Abdomen/Pelvis with IV Contrast (Test of Choice)

  • Sensitivity 90-95% for SBO
  • Identifies:
    • Transition point (dilated proximal → decompressed distal bowel)
    • Cause of obstruction (adhesion, hernia, mass, volvulus)
    • Signs of strangulation: bowel wall thickening, mesenteric haziness/fluid, decreased/absent bowel wall enhancement, pneumatosis intestinalis, portal venous gas
  • Oral contrast NOT needed (pooled intraluminal fluid serves as natural contrast)
  • Small bowel feces sign: particulate material in dilated SB (distal/complete obstruction)

Management

Initial Resuscitation

  • NPO
  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation (NS or LR) — patients are often significantly volume depleted
  • Electrolyte correction (K, Mg replacement)
  • NG tube decompression: for persistent vomiting, significant distension
  • Pain control: IV opioids as needed; ketorolac
  • Antiemetics: ondansetron 4 mg IV

Nonoperative Management (Adhesive SBO without Strangulation)

  • Trial of nonoperative management for partial, adhesive SBO without signs of strangulation
  • NG decompression + IV fluids + bowel rest
  • Water-soluble contrast challenge (Gastrografin):
    • 100 mL PO/via NGT
    • If contrast reaches colon by 24 hours → predicts resolution with nonoperative management (sensitivity ~97%)[1]
    • May also have therapeutic effect (osmotic — draws fluid into lumen, stimulates peristalsis)
  • ~70-80% of adhesive SBO resolves with conservative management
  • Failure of nonoperative trial: no improvement in 24-72 hours → surgery

Surgical Management

  • Indications for emergent surgery:
    • Complete obstruction
    • Signs of strangulation/peritonitis
    • Incarcerated/strangulated hernia
    • Closed-loop obstruction on CT
    • Hemodynamic instability not responding to resuscitation
    • Failure of nonoperative management
  • Surgical consult early for all cases (even if initially managed conservatively)

Disposition

  • Admit all patients with SBO
  • Surgical consultation in ED for all patients
  • ICU if septic, hemodynamically unstable, or peritonitic
  • Serial abdominal exams every 4-8 hours
  • Repeat imaging if clinical deterioration

See Also

References

  1. Abbas S, et al. Water-soluble contrast in management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007;(3):CD005598. PMID 17636810
  • Maung AA, et al. Evaluation and management of small-bowel obstruction: an Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma practice management guideline. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012;73(5 Suppl 4):S362-369. PMID 23114494
  • Defined by ten Broek RP, et al. Bologna guidelines for diagnosis and management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. World J Emerg Surg. 2018;13:24. PMID 29946347
  • Taylor MR, Lalani N. Adult small bowel obstruction. Acad Emerg Med. 2013;20(6):528-544. PMID 23758299